Xfinity reaches deal to carry Braves games on BravesVision

NORTH PORT, FLORIDA - MARCH 24: Ronald Acuña Jr. #13 of the Atlanta Braves celebrates with teammates in the dugout after scoring in the third inning against the Tampa Bay Rays during a Grapefruit League spring training game at CoolToday Park on March 24, 2026 in North Port, Florida. (Photo by Julio Aguilar/Getty Images) | Getty Images

It appears that the cable pieces of the Braves television distribution are starting to fall into place.

The News always comes down in a navy blue image with white text on it, so this is definitely a big deal. The Atlanta Braves and Xfinity aka Comcast have reached a deal to carry BravesVision, the Braves’ owned and operated network. BravesVision will be available for the customers in Atlanta’s television footprint, which contains Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi, South Carolina, Tennessee, and western North Carolina. I’m not familiar enough with Xfinity to know if BravesVision will require an extended tier package. But I don’t think you have many free options on channel 1254, unless it’s an all-audio channel featuring the smooth sounds of the 70s and beyond. Reportedly, the Braves’ insistence on being on a base tier has been a sticking point in negotiations.

Yesterday it was announced that the Braves agreed to terms with Spectrum. There are around ten cable companies in Braves Country, but it appears they’ve agreed with the major ones. I would be surprised if the other cable companies didn’t find a deal this week. You’re covered with Gray TV on Friday, and FOX on Saturday. So Sunday is the first day you’ll need to be covered with BravesVision (or Braves.tv). We’ll keep you informed as the cable picture continues to clear.

Mets' Mike Tauchman expected to miss six weeks following successful surgery on left meniscus

Mike Tauchman underwent surgery Thursday morning to repair the meniscus tear in his left knee.

Everything went as planned according to Jon Heyman of the NY Post, and the veteran outfielder is now expected to miss six weeks before working his way back into game action. 

Tauchman was in the mix for a Mets roster spot before going down with the injury late in camp. 

He was putting together a strong showing, spending time in all three outfield positions and racking up a .371 OBP across 13 Grapefruit League games. 

New York will instead lean on Tyrone Taylor and Jared Young as their outfield depth behind Juan Soto, Luis Robert Jr, and Carson Benge for the time being.

They did also make an addition early in the day Thursday, bringing back Tommy Pham on a minor league deal. 

The Yankees Rotation Depth Inventory: March

Tampa, FL: New York Yankees' Luis Gil throws live batting practice during spring training at George M. Steinbrenner Field in Tampa, Florida on Feb. 25, 2025. (Photo by Thomas A. Ferrara/Newsday RM via Getty Images) | Newsday via Getty Images

Whether due to injury, poor performance, or the quirks of a 162-game schedule, a team generally needs far more than five starters to make it through a season (11 different pitchers started games for the 2025 Yankees). Each month during the season, we take stock of the Yankees’ options to join the starting rotation through the Rotation Depth Inventory. With Gerrit Cole, Carlos Rodón, and Clarke Schmidt all starting the season on the IL, the team’s depth could be tested early. Let’s take a look at the the team’s top options should they need someone to fill in.

Luis Gil

An argument could be made that Luis Gil is not depth at all. The Yankees will begin the season with a four-man rotation, taking advantage of some early off-days to carry an extra reliever until their 14th game, at which point they will presumably need to add a fifth starter. Gil carries the inside track due to his pedigree, but his role with the Yankees has become increasingly uncertain. After taking home AL Rookie of the Year honors with a breakout 2024 campaign, Gil missed most of 2025 with a lat strain. When he did return, the results were strong (4-1 with a 3.32 ERA in 11 starts) but the team grew concerned with his underlying metrics, as his fastball velo dipped and fastball shape got out of whack, dropping his strikeout rate a full 10 percent.

This spring was a similar story for Gil — decent enough results, unresolved concerns about his ability to miss bats. His last outing was his most encouraging for pitching coach Matt Blake. “We feel good about the adjustment he made going into the last outing,” Blake said. “He got the quality of the fastball back — the velo up, the miss. All of those things are important to see. Now it’s just a matter of what that looks like the first couple of weeks of the season.”

That last piece is key. Despite Gil’s strong positioning to assume the fifth starter role once it opens up, the Yankees will be monitoring how he looks in the interim. If he backslides, it’s not out of the realm of possibility that the team could look elsewhere to fill in until Cole and Rodón return.

Elmer Rodríguez

While the fireballing Carlos Lagrange got the headlines this offseason, it’s Elmer Rodríguez who’s actually next up in the pecking order. After he was named by Baseball America as the Yankees’ 2025 Minor League Player of the Year, the team added him to its 40-man roster, protecting him from the Rule 5 Draft and giving him a key leg up in the depth charts. Since he won’t require an existing spot to be vacated, Rodríguez could be easily promoted for a spot start or two and sent back down afterwards.

Acquired from the Red Sox before last season for Carlos Narváez, the right-hander zoomed through the minors, rising from High-A all the way to Triple-A by the end of the year while striking out the second-most batters across the minors. Named the Yankees’ No. 3 prospect before the season by MLB Pipeline, Rodríguez features a fastball that tops out in the high 90s alongside three promising breaking pitches that would give him legitimate options to work with in a big-league rotation.

Rodríguez is slated to start the year with Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre and, with a hot start, could force his way into the conversation for New York, particularly if the team has to contend with more injuries.

Carlos Lagrange

As mentioned, Carlos Lagrange has quickly become a darling of the New York media, featuring a fastball that’s reached 103 and would make him a unique weapon in a big-league rotation. The eye test is backed up by the experts: MLB Pipeline named him their No. 2 Yankees prospect before the season. In addition to his all-world heater, the right-hander features a slider, a cutter, and a changeup that have promise.

After rising to Double-A last season, Lagrange could likely do with some more seasoning. He’ll start the year at Triple-A, where he’ll have the chance to do exactly that. While not likely to get promoted early, if the 21-year-0ld can back up his stuff with results at Scranton/Wilkes-Barre he should be in play for a role with the Yankees at some point this year, either in the rotation or the bullpen.

Ryan Yarbrough & Paul Blackburn

When it comes to a spot start, a nontraditional strategy is always in play as well. Ryan Yarbrough and Paul Blackburn have combined for 162 career starts and, while each is expected to begin the year in the bullpen, they’ve stretched out to pitch multiple innings during spring training and could serve as an opener or bulk reliever, working with other pitchers to piece together a bullpen game. It’s also plausible either could segue into a more traditional starting role if they make several outings in a row of increasing length, which is essentially what the Yankees did with Yarbrough last year.


With Luis Gil waiting in the wings, Carlos Rodón eyeing a return as early as April, and Gerrit Cole hoping to be healthy shortly thereafter, the Yankees will look to bridge the gap to their sidelined All-Stars without having to dip into their depth any further. If they do need to turn elsewhere, they have talented youngsters and experienced veterans who should be able to fill in capably for short stretches but might not be ready to shoulder a starter’s full workload.

SEE IT: Mets' Carson Benge hits first career home run in MLB debut on Opening Day

It's outta here!

Mets rookie Carson Benge made quite the first impression on Thursday, blasting his first career home run in his MLB debut.

The 23-year-old took Pittsburgh Pirates RHP Justin Lawrence deep in the bottom of the sixth inning on Opening Day, launching a breaking ball over the right-center field wall to push New York's lead to 10-5.

Benge had gone 0-for-2 with a walk and two strikeouts before recording his first hit with the solo home run.

He became just the second Met to hit a home run in their MLB debut on Opening Day, joining Kaz Matsui in 2004. He also joins teammate Brett Baty as players to hit a HR as their first career hit (although, Baty did it in his first AB).

The Citi Field faithful rewarded the right fielder with a curtain call to celebrate the special moment.

Oh, and to add to the excitement, Francisco Alvarez kept Mets fans on their feet by crushing a home run of his own in the next at-bat.

 

Braves are relying on veteran Chris Sale to provide stability for a rotation ravaged by injuries

ATLANTA — The Atlanta Braves are leaning on Chris Sale to provide much-needed stability for a rotation that has been decimated by injuries this spring.

Sale, 36, will start Atlanta’s season-opening game against Kansas City. It will be Sale’s second-straight opening day start and seventh of his career.

Sale, who won the 2024 NL Cy Young Award in his first season in Atlanta, never has been more important for a team’s hopes entering a season. A devastating series of injuries to starting pitchers has forced first-year manager Walt Weiss and the Braves to remake the rotation behind the left-hander.

The bad news began at the start of spring training when right-hander Spencer Schwellenbach was placed on the 60-day injured list due to inflammation in his right elbow. Schwellenbach had surgery on Feb. 18 to remove “loose bodies” in the elbow and rotation candidate Hurston Waldrep had a similar procedure later in the month.

On March 9, the Braves announced left-hander Joey Wentz, another rotation candidate, would miss the season after he tore the ACL in his right knee while covering first base in an exhibition game.

On Monday, the Braves said right-hander Spencer Strider, one of the team’s top starters, will start the season on the injured list because of a strained oblique.

Schwellenbach and Waldrep could return around the middle of the season. The Braves are hopeful Strider, who was placed on the injured list retroactive to Sunday, may return in April.

For now, Reynaldo Lopez, Grant Holmes and Bryce Elder are expected to line up behind Sale. Rookie Didier Fuentes, who made the opening day roster as a middle reliever after an impressive spring, could be needed as a starter. JR Ritchie, who will open the season at Triple-A Gwinnett, is another option.

There is some irony that Sale is almost the last man standing from the Braves’ original projected rotation. He hasn’t been known for good health in his 15-year career with the Chicago White Sox, Boston and Atlanta.

Sale made only 31 starts for the Red Sox from 2021-23. He missed the 2020 season after having Tommy John surgery. He made only two starts in 2022 after he fractured a rib and then broke his left pinkie. His final season with Boston ended in August 2023 when he broke his right wrist riding a bicycle.

Sale was 7-5 with a 2.58 ERA with Atlanta last season, when he landed on the injured list on June 21 with a fractured left rib cage and didn’t make his next start until Aug. 30.

Sale posted a 2.75 ERA this spring and said he is excited to make another opening day start.

“I feel like it’s an honor,” Sale said. “I’ve always taken it very seriously and I just appreciate it. You can say it’s just another start but opening day, there’s something really special to it. It’s like the first day of school. It is very different than all the other ones so I definitely appreciate it and I’m thankful for it, I’m excited for it.”

The start will come three days before Sale’s 37th birthday.

Sale is 25-8 with a 2.46 ERA in 49 starts and one relief appearance with the Braves. He made the All-Star team in 2024 and 2025, raising his career total to nine.

GDT: Welcome back, everyone!

NORTH PORT, FLORIDA - MARCH 24: Manager Kevin Cash #16 of the Tampa Bay Rays walks back to the dugout after relieving Garrett Cleavinger (not pictured) in the second inning against the Atlanta Braves during a Grapefruit League spring training game at CoolToday Park on March 24, 2026 in North Port, Florida. (Photo by Julio Aguilar/Getty Images) | Getty Images

For the first time this year: Go Rays!

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Surging Sabres have brought the buzz back to Buffalo in closing in on 1st playoff berth in 15 years

Buffalo Sabres

Mar 25, 2026; Buffalo, New York, USA; Buffalo Sabres left wing Jason Zucker (17) celebrates his second goal of the game with teammates during the third period against the Boston Bruins at KeyBank Center. Mandatory Credit: Timothy T. Ludwig-Imagn Images

Timothy T. Ludwig/Timothy T. Ludwig-Imagn Images

BUFFALO, N.Y. — Josh Norris’ father never had steered him wrong before. And yet the Sabres forward somewhat was skeptical of just how passionate Buffalo was as a hockey market upon his arrival in a trade from Ottawa a year ago.

Sidelined by an injury, Norris would sit in the press box staring out at a half-empty arena, and hearing a chorus of boos and derogatory chants directed at the team and now former general manager Kevyn Adams, who was fired in December and replaced by Jarmo Kekalainen.

This wasn’t the rollicking atmosphere his dad, Dwayne Norris, recalled of Buffalo during his brief NHL playing days in the mid-1990s, before spending 11 more seasons in Germany.

“I knew he wasn’t lying,” Norris said of his father’s recollections, which suddenly have been realized by a Sabres team enjoying a remarkable turnaround that’s unmistakably revived the hockey buzz in Buffalo this season.

“I feel like they’re getting let out of a cage in a sense — and I mean that in the best way possible,” Norris said of an energized fanbase that’s filling the 19,000-plus seat KeyBank Center, and bringing back memorable chants such as, “Ooh! Ahh! Sabres on the warpath.”

“Now that we’re in this spot, I think it’s hard to miss,” he added. “It’s right in front of you. And it’s incredible to be a part of.”

Winning has a way of flipping the script for a franchise mired in an NHL-record 14-season playoff drought.

In the span of three-plus months, the Sabres have gone from sitting last in the Eastern Conference standings to sharing top spot with Carolina following their 4-3 overtime loss to Boston. The Sabres are riding a 33-6-4 run that’s all but assured them of clinching their first playoff berth since 2011.

And the fans are coming back in hordes.

A season after selling out just five of 40 home games (not including an NHL Global Series outing in Europe), the Sabres have enjoyed 17 sellouts this year, including their past 11 straight.

“You can’t beat it. It’s unbelievable. We have some of the best fans in the league and they deserve the success,” said forward Alex Tuch, who was a Sabres fan growing up in Syracuse, New York.

Now 29, Tuch was 14 the last time the Sabres qualified for the playoffs, and had just turned 11 the last time Buffalo won a playoff series in 2007.

“It’s pretty cool, honestly,” Tuch said of what his younger self might think. “I’d be pretty proud of myself right now. But like I’ve said, job not done.”

The Sabres, to a man, have taken a stay-the-course approach in avoiding getting caught up in the wave of excitement they’ve generated. Past frustrations and collapses are still too recent to allow players and coach Lindy Ruff to be drawn into a sense of overconfidence.

Though there are enough comparisons to the team’s last heydays in 2005-07, when Buffalo twice reached and lost in the East finals, Ruff has kept the focus firmly on the present.

“You guys are going to get tired of this,” he said, referring to reporters, “but we’re focusing on the next game.”

And yet Ruff, now in the second season of his second stint in Buffalo, can appreciate how the atmosphere has changed during home games — reminiscent of his first tenure coaching the team from 1997-2013.

“The energy in the building has really been great for our group. I mean, it’s probably the first time they’ve experienced it,” Ruff said. “So embrace it but know there’s a lot of work to do.”

With 10 games left, Buffalo’s magic number to clinch a playoff berth is 10 points.

Leading scorer Tage Thompson only had known frustration during his previous seven seasons in Buffalo.

“I think everyone in the room has a big level of pride for where we’ve gotten ourselves up to this point. It’s been an extremely hard road to get here,” Thompson said. “I think that gives you a little bit more appreciation for where you’re at. And I think it makes you not want to take it for granted.”

Michigan's Yaxel Lendeborg motivated by Alabama's lack of recruitment in transfer portal

CHICAGO, IL. — Yaxel Lendeborg will have a little extra motivation against Alabama in the Sweet 16.

Lendeborg played for the University of Alabama-Birmingham for two years in 2023-24 and 2024-25 before entering the NCAA Transfer Portal at the conclusion of last season. When he entered, he had hoped to stay in-state to play for Nate Oats and the Crimson Tide.

Eventually, he settled on Michigan.

"When I entered the transfer portal out of UAB, I was hoping to get recruited by Alabama. And when I didn't, it kind of hurt me a little bit. Not in a way that I can say 'I hate them.' It just bothered me a little."

Unfortunately for Lendeborg (or fortunately, depending on whether you root for Michigan or Alabama), the call from Alabama never came, so he eventually picked Dusty May and the Wolverines. Now the two programs will square off on Friday, March 26, in the Sweet 16 from the United Center.

UAB's Bartow Arena is about 57 miles from Alabama's Coleman Coliseum in Tuscaloosa, Alabama. Lendeborg added that he is excited for Alabama and considers it a second home.

"There's going to be juice for sure," Lendeborg said of playing Alabama. "I know I'm going to try my best to be the best player on the floor tomorrow for sure. All it is extra motivation for sure, just not in the sense where I'm like, 'this is what you guys missed on,' but like you guys could have called at least, or something like that."

Oats refuted that the Crimson Tide "never" recruited Lendeborg, but he did admit that the team was not as aggressive in its pitch.

"We did make a call," Oats said. "It never got very deep. I think there were some programs that were in a little deeper with a lot more money at the time. It's one of those, you kind of call, see where the situation is at. Probably wasn't something we were going to be able to do, so we didn't spend a lot of time on it.

"... It wasn't a lack of thinking he wasn't a very good player. He was the best player in the portal."

Lendeborg averaged 17.7 points per game for the Blazers during the 2024-25 season, to go along with 11.4 rebounds, 4.2 assists, 1.8 blocks and 1.7 steals per game. He's averaged 14.7 points, 6.9 rebounds, 3.2 assists, 1.3 blocks and 1.1 steals for the Wolverines in 2025-26.

May said he will not get in the way of Lendeborg's "revenge" game against Alabama.

"I think we've had several subplots this year and he seems to be performing well up to this point," May said. "So whatever irritates him, I'm going to ride with that and support him.

"Nate and I being friends, we talked through that process. And don't tell Yax, but they did try to recruit him."

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Did Alabama recruit Yaxel Lendeborg in transfer portal? What he said ahead of Sweet 16

Senators Provide Full Injury Update on Chabot, Sanderson and More

As expected, the official news on Thomas Chabot's injury isn't good.

Senators head coach Travis Green announced on Thursday that Chabot has a broken arm that required surgery, and he'll be lost to the Senators for four to eight weeks.

Chabot was injured on a cross-check by Rangers captain J.T. Miller on Monday night.

The play went unpenalized, and while some Sens fans hoped there might be some supplemental NHL discipline for Miller for breaking a guy's arm with his stick, the league didn't see it that way. In fairness, that kind of cross-check happens twenty times every night in every game. This one happened to strike a vulnerable spot at just the wrong time.

Chabot had his surgery today on "his forearm or something," as Green described it, and if the 29-year-old defenseman misses four weeks, that takes us to April 26, or eight days into the first round of the playoffs. If he misses the max, eight weeks, then his return would be sometime during the Conference Final.

But while the Senators have just arrived in a playoff position, they're a long way from clinching one. And with Chabot out for the rest of the regular season, the Sens could use some reinforcements to stay in this spot.

So on Thursday morning, as you might expect, Green was peppered with media questions about his four recently injured defencemen. 

Jake Sanderson?

"He's skating, so that's a good sign. He'll come with us on the road trip, so that's another good sign."

Thomas Chabot"

"He'll be out for a while... I'm not sure; four, six, eight (weeks)."

Dennis Gilbert?

"He'll be out probably another three weeks... two to three weeks."

Lassi Thomson?

"Lassi skated today. I don't want to say day-to-day, but I don't think he'll be too long."

Green admitted that Thomson's prognosis is better than originally expected. After Monday's game in New York, Green originally said that both Chabot and Thomson would be "out for a while."

Nick Jensen underwent knee surgery (meniscus) last week, and it sounds like his recovery timeline resembles Chabot's.

For the time being, as the Senators get ready for another big game against the Pittsburgh Penguins on Thursday night at CTC, they'll line it up just as they did in Detroit, where Carter Yakemchuk and Jorian Donovan made their NHL debuts.

Sens projected defencemen vs Pittsburgh (listed by ice time in Detroit)

1. Tyler Kleven (28:11)
2. Jordan Spence (26:24)
3. Artem Zub (25:10)
4. Nikolas Matinpalo (19:57)
5. Carter Yakemchuk (12:46)
6. Jorian Donovan (4:42)

After so many people left them for dead, the Senators clawing their way back into the playoff mix is an outstanding accomplishment. But staying there with a patchwork blue line will be just as impressive.

Steve Warne
The Hockey News

This article was first published at The Hockey News Ottawa. Check out more great Sens features from The Hockey News at the links below:

Road To The Playoffs: Wait... Are the Senators Really Doing This?
Injury-Ravaged Senators Bring Up Top Prospect For Battle With Red Wings
Senators Lose Two More Defensemen To Injury
Former Senator Mika Zibanejad Faces Ottawa In 1000th NHL Game
Five Years Later, Stützle Still Puzzled By Senators' Decision To Let Amadio Get Away
'I Just Needed to Get Some Anger Out': Tkachuk Delivers Statement Game

Kings Vs Canucks Game Preview: Kings Desperate To Snap 4 Game Losing Streak

The Kings are 0-0-2 on their road trip so far, and they play their final road game of this 3-game trip tonight against the Vancouver Canucks. The Kings are coming into this game after a 3-2 shootout loss against the Calgary Flames. The Kings are currently on a 2-game point streak, having lost to Utah and Calgary in overtime. The Canucks, on the other hand, are coming into this game having lost 5-3 against the Anaheim Ducks. 

Kings Projected Lines

Here are the projected lines for the Kings tonight: 

Artemi Panarin - Anze Kopitar - Adrian Kempe

Trevor Moore - Quinton Byfield - Alex Laferriere

Joel Armia - Scott Laughton - Jared Wright

Jeff Malott - Samuel Helenius - Mathieu Joseph

Mikey Anderson - Drew Doughty

Joel Edmundson - Brandt Clarke

Brian Dumoulin - Cody Ceci

Darcy Kuemper

Anton Forsberg

Canucks Projected Lines 

Here are the Canucks projected lines tonight: 

Liam Ohgren - Marco Rossi - Brock Boeser

Drew O’Connor - Elias Pettersson - Evander Kane

Max Sasson - Teddy Blueger - Linus Karlsson

Jake DeBrusk - Aatu Raty - Nils Hoglander

Elias Pettersson - Filip Hronek

Marcus Pettersson - Tom Willander

Zeev Buium - P.O Joseph

Kevin Lankinen

Nikita Tolopilo

Line Changes and Injuries 

King's defenseman Drew Doughty did take part in the optional skate this morning and is expected to play after he missed practice for maintenance on Wednesday. Adrian Kempe is also expected to play today after he missed practice on Wednesday. 

The Kings are likely to start Darcy Kuemper for the 2nd straight game, and the Canucks are likely to start Kevin Lankinen, who is also set to play his 2nd straight game. 

Key Factors 

With the Kings sitting 3 points back of the final wildcard spot, this is a must-win game for them as they cannot afford to lose any points. The Kings have to get depth scoring from their bottom 6. Recently, Artemi Panarin has been the consistent offensive threat for the Kings in the last couple of games, and while that is a major positive, the other forwards have to step up as well if they want to make the playoffs. 

The Kings and Flames game was another example of the Kings failing to hold a lead when it mattered. Against a team like the Flames, if the Kings end up missing the playoffs by a point or 2, this game will be one that Kings fans look back on. 

The Kings cannot take the Canucks lightly; just because they are 32nd in the NHL does not mean they will roll over and let the Kings win. The Kings need their goaltending to be more consistent, and their defence needs to return to the form it showed throughout the season. 

Overall, the Kings need to win this game to stay within a game of the playoff race. My prediction for tonight's game is a 4-1 Kings win. 

Tom Brady says he's weighed coming out of retirement, but the NFL doesn't like the idea

Tom Brady revealed in an interview released on Thursday that he considered coming out of retirement, but the National Football League wasn't particularly receptive to the idea.

Brady, a seven-time Super Bowl champion and minority owner of the Las Vegas Raiders, was asked in a recent interview with CNBC if he's looked into the rules regarding a minority owner returning to NFL play.

“I actually have inquired, and they (the NFL) don’t like that idea very much, so I’m going to leave it at that,” Brady said. “We explored a lot of different things, and I’m very happily retired. Let me say that, too.”

It wouldn't have been Brady's first time coming out of retirement. The three-time league MVP briefly retired during the 2022 offseason after two seasons with the Buccaneers. He had a change of heart 40 days later and went on to play for one more year before retiring “for good” in February 2023.

Brady recently turned heads in the Fanatics Flag Football Classic, where he played alongside Jalen Hurts, Devonta Smith, Stefon Diggs and Raiders running back Ashton Jeanty. He also reunited on the field with his teammate of 11 seasons and four-time time Super Bowl champion Rob Gronkowski.

___

AP NFL: https://apnews.com/hub/nfl

GameThread: Tigers vs. Padres, 4:10 p.m.

DETROIT, MI - OCTOBER 08: Detroit Tigers mascot Paws runs with the Tigers Win banner following their 9-3 victory in Game 4 of the ALDS series between the Detroit Tigers and the Seattle Mariners on Wednesday October 8, 2025 at Comerica Park in Detroit, MI. (Photo by Steven King/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images) | Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

Detroit Tigers vs. San Diego Padres

Time/Place: 4:10 p.m., Petco Park
SB Nation Site: Gaslamp Ball
Media: Detroit Sportsnet, MLB.TV, Tigers Radio Network
Pitching Matchup: LHP Tarik Skubal (0-0, 0.00 ERA) vs. RHP Nick Pivetta (0-0, 0.00 ERA)

* Note: Stats in the table below are Fangraphs’ 2026 projections for both players

PlayerGIPK%BB%ERAFIPfWAR
Skubal32201.031.0%5.0%2.672.616.4
Pivetta29173.026.3%7.3%3.964.012.5

Lineups

TIGERSPADRES
Kerry Carpenter – RFFernando Tatis – RF
Gleyber Torres – 2BXander Bogaerts – SS
Colt Keith – DHManny Machado – 3B
Riley Greene – LFJackson Merrill – CF
Spencer Torkelson – 1BMiguel Andujar – DH
Kevin McGonigle – 3BGavin Sheets – 1B
Dillon Dingler – CRamon Laureano – LF
Parker Meadows – CFFreddy Fermin – C
Javier Baez – SSJake Cronenworth – 2B

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Game Discussion for the St. Louis Cardinals vs Tampa Bay Rays Opening Day

Sep 3, 2025; St. Louis, Missouri, USA; St. Louis Cardinals starting pitcher Matthew Liberatore (52) pitches against the Athletics during the first inning at Busch Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Jeff Curry-Imagn Images | Jeff Curry-Imagn Images

It’s finally time to play some baseball games that count. The St. Louis Cardinals kick off the 2026 season at Busch Stadium as the Tampa Bay Rays come to town. According to MLB.com, Matthew Liberatore will start the game for the Cardinals while the Rays will send Drew Rasmussen to the mound. This will also be the major league debut for Cardinals phenom (or at least we hope) JJ Wetherholt.

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Todd McLellan Emphasizes Pace As Red Wings’ Identity With Playoff Spot In The Balance

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In a scene that has become all too familiar for the Detroit Red Wings over the past two seasons, March has been a struggle, marked by costly losses to divisional opponents and the evaporation of a once-comfortable postseason cushion.

The most recent setback was a 3-2 loss to the Ottawa Senators on Tuesday evening, a club that had not only played the previous night but was also missing its top two defensemen. 

For large stretches of the game, the Red Wings were sluggish and turnover-prone, and while they managed to cut the deficit to one, they struggled to even gain the zone during a critical power-play chance with five minutes left. 

Afterward, team captain Dylan Larkin said that the entire dressing room was "mad" about the result, and that they needed to channel that emotion toward the equally critical stretch of play that will ultimately determine whether or not they return to the postseason for the first time since 2016. 

Following practice Thursday afternoon, head coach Todd McLellan discussed what he believes the team’s identity must be, beginning with the importance of playing with pace.

“During the year, and throughout the year, we talked about our pace,” McLellan explained. “When we play with pace, which I thought we did against Boston — not always with the puck, but sometimes without it when we get in and forecheck and create turnovers and play with some type of pace, we’re a better team."

The Red Wings had no problem putting pucks on net during their 4-2 loss to the Boston Bruins on Saturday evening, finishing with 43 shots but getting stymied by the dynamic play of goaltender Jeremy Swayman. 

But among the mistakes that have caused problems for the Red Wings in recent losses to the Senators and Florida Panthers were failing to clear the puck out of their own zone, resulting in goals against along with power-play opportunities that went for naught.

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“Obviously, special teams come into play, but the big thing — and we talked about it today — but some of the moments in the game, it either goes for or against you, and at the end of the night, we tally," he said. "We’ve got to get individuals ending up on the plus side rather than the negative side. A little over 50, not to 100, but just a little over 50. Right now, we may be at 48. It’s such a fine line." 

“You can go back to Ottawa - we cleared a puck, got it outside the blue line, we took the puck back into our own end carelessly, and it’s in our net," he continued. "There’s a moment. The night before against Boston, we’re penalty killing, and we shoot a puck from one end of the rink to the other.

We can clean those moments up, turning them from negatives to positives. Just flip those moments into a positive one, and it will go a long way for all of us.”

The Red Wings head onto the road to face the playoff-bound Buffalo Sabres, who have been the hottest team in the NHL since mid-December. 

It’s not official yet, but the Sabres are on the verge of ending their lengthy postseason drought, which dates back to 2011. If that happens, the Red Wings will inherit the NHL’s longest active drought, which is already the longest in franchise history.

The next 11 games will determine whether that fate befalls them and will also go a long way in defining Detroit’s identity.

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Game 1: Detroit Tigers at San Diego Padres

SAN DIEGO, CALIFORNIA - MARCH 27: A general view of the National Anthem prior to the game on Opening Day between the Atlanta Braves and the San Diego Padres at Petco Park on March 27, 2025 in San Diego, California. (Photo by Orlando Ramirez/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Detroit Tigers at San Diego Padres, March 26, 2026, 1:10 p.m. PST

Watch: Padres.TV

Location: Petco Park – San Diego, Calif.

Listen: 97.3 The Fan



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